Akbar the Great implement as leader of the Mughal Empire Encouraging Hindus to play a major role in Mughal government and society.
<h3>What political strategies did Akbar employ to expand his empire?</h3>
He strengthened the army, promoted trade, standardized weights and measures, established land reforms, and established a strong central administration with paid officials. He also acknowledged and tolerated variety.
<h3>When did Muslim dominance in India begin?</h3>
Between 1526 until 1707, the Mughal Empire dominated the majority of the Indian subcontinent. When the Turco-Mongol leader Babur defeated Ibrahim Lodi, the final Pashtun monarch of the Delhi Sultanate, at the First Battle of Panipat in 1526, he established the empire.
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Provided a system of selling land
Answer: Their journey became known as<u> the "Trail of Tears."</u>
Explanation/context:
In the court case, <em>Worcester v. Georgia</em> (1832), Samuel Worcester was a Christian minister working among the Cherokee and was supportive of the Cherokee cause. To block the activity of a man like Rev. Worcester, the state of Georgia passed a law prohibiting white persons to live within the Cherokee Nation territory without permission from the Georgia state government. Worcester and other missionaries challenged this law, and the case rose to the level of a Supreme Court decision. The decision by the Supreme Court, written by Chief Justice Marshall, struck down the Georgia law and reprimanded Georgia for interfering in the affairs of the Cherokee Nation. Marshall wrote that Indian nations are "distinct, independent political communities retaining their original natural rights."
President Andrew Jackson chose not to enforce the court's decision. He said at the time: "The decision of the Supreme Court has fell stillborn, and they find that it cannot coerce Georgia to yield to its mandate." He told the Cherokee that they would need to operate under the jurisdiction of the state of Georgia or else relocate. This was a step in the direction of what became known as the "Trail of Tears," when the Cherokee were removed from Georgia and moved to territory in Oklahoma.
High prices for supplies contributed to the creation of the farmers alliance.